The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1910 Page: 2 of 4
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B. 0. MURRAY, Proprietor.
CO.
8t.,New York.
and
Worksl
loeue furnished
mailed on
ebook c&ta-
Sunday, April 8, 1910.
Bright, Cheerful
WALLPAPERS
Money does not always buy
beaut}- in a home. It is
largely influenced by the in-
terior decoration. Home re-
quires harmony—a blending
with the decorations, the
background, and the furnish-
ing*. Our stock of artistic
wall papers, art friezes, bor-
ders ami new decorations
enables you to decorate your
home beautifully artist^andly
at a very moderate cost.
Waldren Drue Store
Where Medicine
Is Purity.
A F. TMSMANN. Praprittor
This paper goes
davs, at noon.
to press Fri-
Trlrphonrs:
(Southwestern Telephone Co.)
Qaertikb, 946.
B. C. Murray, Residence. 361.
Tea la.
When things don’t go to suit yon,
And the world seems upside down,
Don’t waste your time in fretting,
But drive away that frown ;
Since life is oft perplexing,
’Tie much the wisest plan
To bear all trials bravely,
And smile whene’er yon can.
Why should you dread the morrow,
And thus despoil today T
For when yon borrow trouble
You always have to pay.
It is a good oid maxim.
Which should be often preached—
Don’t cross the bridge before you,
Until the bridge is reached.'
—Frank Stanton.
litfla Stories af
All over South Africa are salt
pans of great value and few are
being worked as a business under-
taking and by the most elementa-
ry methods for producing salt in a
marketable form.
A 1,000,000 barrel reservoir
lined with concrete for the storage
of crude oil has lately been com-
pleted at Port Richmond, Califor-
nia, and one of 8,000,000 barrels
capacity is under construction at
Bakersfield.
The co-partner shipbuilding
yards stand fifth in the amount of
work produced during the past
year.
26 per cent of 312 cotton mills
in North Carolina are now using
electricity as a motive power.
This revolution in the matter o
motive power has been achieve*
practically within the past ten
years.
The use of electric power in
mines is very much opposed by
mine workers as the leakage
poorly insulated wires has a ten-
dency to ignite mine gas and fre-
quently causes explosion.
the Mexican
i to allow corn to be
at doty a second tiro<
It is probable that an
will shortly be made to raise the
sunken battleship Maine its the
Lavana harbor.
:r
little down on a bis
no. xi.
With the incorporation of the
city came the dance halls. They
were
Skiddy street, but owing to
, Xi, . , the bad odor of the street, the
home. Its money m your | ... ,
pocket. Storage and pack-J councll changed the name to o „
bill.
Start right. Let SCflTT i|Was
i big bi
seen
furnish you r|
The Pennslyvania Railroad has
confined princit*II7'’to U“ ^ C°llePto
■send professors to Altoona, Pa.,
two days a week to give instruc-
tion to apprentices employed in
tbe railroad shops. The plan is
of old Skiddy street were devoted
principally to dance halls and|
■*. Jew and Christain met yester-
day morning at tbe Congrega-
. - , . . . . , tional ministers’ meeting, and after
▲ most wonderful piece of en- u by Rabbi Hale of Tem-
gineering which is about finished, I nle Share Emetb on "What the
is the construction of a tunnel Jew Believes," tbs ministers ex-
between Detroit and Windsor, On- P™*** ***** •ZPP*ti£ !»•
fimo under t*«' Drtr.it St" coull^i.1
which is from 60 to90ft. high. The the various tenets of higher criti-
engineering difficulties call for cism, particularly as to tbe non-
soecial methods and contrivances. Mosaic authorship of the Pen-
reta has orders on
6,600,000 tons of material. Since tures, and certain scientific con-
the first of the month orders have elusions. Touching tiie lost, Dr.
been placed for 260,000 tons of fa*® remarked, While 1 **-cept
rails and locomotive builders are*™1* ^7t°m ti* bK* 1 fw t
bidding on 400 locomotives. do violence to the Bible by trying
Over 300,000 corporations have to find every modern scientific
been registered at Washington for il*ea in the book.
taxation purposes, and in all therel Uy„ ^ he< lhat ^ere ;B
are 400,000, but about 76,000 are|DO doctrine in the Bible itself lor
infallibility, for verbal infallibility.
.... . , . .... ,Do you think those men who tom-
lt begins to look as though this pilad ^ Blbu> did not koow that
country will soon liave to depend those two accounts of tbe creation
upon Canada for its future supply could never be made to har-
of wood pulp. Immense pulp moniae? They knew it, and yet
mills have been established as far ^ enough
north as 300 miles beyond Quebec. to^e qj^tion was asked bow
The smallest underground elec- there came to be two accounts.
trie railroad in the world is at ‘*Why,” Dr. Sale replied, simply
.■ becaus they were accounts written
Berhn The gauge is one foot. . differenJt meD( who had lwo
four and a half inches. The loco- LjjKgrent ideas to how this world
motive is five feet long, one loot came about. Ami each represents,
and six inches high and is able to I of course, the state of civilization
haul four loaded packages at a intelligence in which he
changed to live, iou might ask.
and 7
with JheuwiTan
field glam. To find it, i
sun disappear and look directly
over it. In a lew more days ft
wiil be visible to the eye and may
be watched without the use of a
glllSH. j
By tbe middle of April the
stranger will be in plain view.
Tbe Halley comet is not a wan-
derer. It it not an astral vagrant
like tbe little comet of a few weeks
ago. It travels in a chartered
orbit and can be follow in its regu-
ar journey about tbe sun.
This will be the most important
visitor in the heavens this year.
Astronomers all over the country
lave been awaitihg its arrival.
Much speculation is being indulged
in as to the effect it will have on
climatic conditions. The earth
will, according to scientists, pass
through the nebulous tail of the
traveler. Therefore tbe world
awaits in speculative interest.
When it makes its traverse of the
son it will have attained its maxi-
mum brilliancy. That will l«e on
May 18. It will be visible, how-
ever, all through April ami May,
and should, if these chroniclers of
the skies are to be relied unoa. be
brilliant spectacle. — Honey
Grove 8ignal.
A. E. Pellerin
jeweler •
Watch repairing. Ail
kinds of fine work a
specialty. Carries fine
line of jewelry. Can save
you money on watches.
the lines of their work. The
l,__.. . t. »__„„„„ „„„ I course will consist of the elements
| brothels It was for many years ... , . ,
... ___r 01 mechanism and material.
the toughest section of Denison. I
There was a dance hall on Main
During the year 1906 the rail-
street about where tbe Reynolds J*0*^8 °* United States paid in
(drag store now is. There was a I wa*es $1,035,437,582.
there one night, when Mc-| The total exports of electrical
speed of 26 miles an hour. Eng-1
How explain tbe diverse accounts
CON QUINN
Diamonds, Watches and
Jowolry Bought and So/d
209 W. Main St.
Fred Sherborne
SHOE REPAIRING
Good work by workmen
who know their business.
Don’t throw away your
old shoes.
123 W. Main Street. *
JE.VYELER
319 W.Main St.
T. E. REABDON
Real Estate, Insurance
Rents Collected
Notary Public...
106 North Rusk Ave.
ONE-WAY
COLONIST
TICKETS
TO
CALOTMUl POINTS
PACIFIC NORTHWEST
ANN MEXICO
At Greatly Reduced Rates
*On Tune"
H.&T.G.
Railway
Tickets on Sale Dally
March 1st to April 15th, 1910
Inclusive
See any H. & T. C. Agent for
Particulars
C. K. Dunlap, T. J. Anderson
Traflic Mgr. G. P. A,
Houston Texas.
iFREE BOOK
*W Ovary Uvtog Wag «a the Am
JSOO Page Book bee, oaa the Treatment and
Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Doge,
3 Poultry, also Stable Chart to
mailed free. f
dub. Perl
street. The two most notorious
were kept by Sallie Miller and
Mike Langley. Langley was shot
and killed by Policeman W 'lliam
Mitchell, at the dance hall. The
policeman was exonerated. Lang-
ley was a dangerous man when in
his cups, but while sober, he was
a very agreeable man, and had
many friends, even among decent
people. At one end of the dance
ball was a platform on which the
fiddlers sat and called oat the
number of the dance. After a set
was over, the girls would march
their partners up to the bar and
call for drinks. This was the
principal source of revenue to the
proprietors and they made lots of
money.
The dance hall never languished
for want of patrons—they never
had a dull night—men taking
their turn to go on the floor with
the girls. Never in the wildest
days of the frontier town had
there been a more dissolute or
more desperate class of inhabi-
tants than during the dance ball
regime. There were cowboys ga-
lore, for this was one of the prin
cipal shipping points for cattle in
Texas.
At all hours of the night the
dance hall section was crowded
with men, and female forms were
seen flitting here and there in
plenty. It was a strange, com-
mingled congregation of cowboys,
Indians, gamblers, saloon keepers
and occasionally respectable people
who went -to see the sights—
Denison by gaslight.
Tbe dance halls were wooden
structures, the Sazarack being the
only one of that character that
was two stories. The bar was at
the entrance and from the bar you
passed through a door into the
dance ball, which was a large
room capable of accommodating
twenty-five sets on the floor. In
the eighties the dance halls disap-
peared. Denison was awakening
to a better life, and public senti
ment had driven the gambling
houses to the second floors. The
bullet that killed Mike Langley
marked tbe decadence of the dance
halls. They occupied a large part
of the pioneer days, and this short
story has not told the half. Very
much that was picturesque, bi-
zarre and romantic belongs to old
Skiddy street days.
The first meeting of the Texas
| Industrial Congress will take {dace
at San Antonio April
congress is an effort to promote
I row
Dowell, chief of police, shot and I goods during the year 1909,
killed a man who, after receiving I amounted to $13,027,5550, an in-
his death wound, ran to the mid-[crease of $4,433,225 as compared
die of Main street and fell dead. | with 1907.
At that period gambling was wide| There now in the army service involving
open ami conducted on the first a total of 35 wireless telegraph
floor, in plain view of people pass-1 stations, of which 13 are in the
ing on the sidewalk. You coaid | United States, 9 in Alaska, 5 in
get any game that you wanted, | the Philipinne Islands, 5 on artil-
from Mexican monte to chuck-a- j lery harbor tugs and 7 in the army
luck. [transport service.
The dance hall on Main street | The Swiss State Railway an-
didn’t last long after the tragedy thorities are engaged in securing
and moved to more congenial [ crater power all over the country
surroundings on Skiddy. There jfor purpose of electric power
were three and sometimes four 9Upp]y {or the railroads. The to-
dance halls in full blast on Skiddy | amount already taken is about
70,000 horse power.
A test was recently made in
Chicago to demonstrate that occu-
pants of aeroplanes could be com-
municated with by means of wire-
less telegraphy. A Wright aero-
plane was used and the test was
satisfactory.
The inventor of the mono-rail
car will give, a display of his sys-
tem at the Toronto Exhibition to
be held in September. 1910.
The orange and lemon groves of
California are being extended into
new regions of the State and beau-
tiful vineyards are being estab-
lished on the Sierra Nevada
mountains.
It is proposed to deepen the
Hudson river and make it a 12-
foot channel from Troy southward
at a cost of some $5,000,000. This
depth will enable vessels drawing
10 to 12 feet to traverse the lakes
from Duluth to Buffalo and thence
by the Erie canal to the Hudson
river and New York, cheapening
the price of grain it is estimated
from 3 to 5 cents a bushel
A new type of electric locomo-
tive has been introduced by the
Baltimore and Ohio road which is
more powerful than any yet made.
The weight over the driver is 90
tons. Tractive power 45,000
pounds. Capacity 3,500 horse
power.
The city of Minneapolis, Minn.,
is about to expend $10,000,000 on
terminals and will erect an ele-
vated road 15 to 22 feet above tbe
streets which will be an air line.
This will give the railroad centers
there an enormous advantage.
A new railroad is to be added to
tbe many St. Louis possesses,
which will run from that city 310
miles ■ into Arkansas. Like all
roads in new territory, it opens
up a vast region of fertile lands
which will be very soon taken np
by farmers.
By means of improved mechan-
ical devices coal can be emptiec
into steamships at the coast from
the piers at the rate of 15 tons per
minute.
Cripple Creek is becoming
most wonderful gold-producing
camp, every! new development
increasing its actual and prospec-
tive wealth. Three new strikes
were made last week.
Last week 400 Mormon colon-
ists left Utah for Mexico to join
___many other colonists who have
19. The j previously gone to the same place.
_____ o ^ ^ _____' Large numbers of Mormons are
Texas^velopmentTallying*dTIn-* preparing to leave their old homes
tensto to Sid end. The /rove- *>* * ^iry where they can have
and as many wives as they want,
The great scarcity of comm
lish engineers have been sent by L, ^ flood? or how accoant for
the governmen to examine it with I the different descriptions oi the
a view of adopting it in London. | animals that went into the ark, or
liberally adopting steel for sleep- jn tbe g^ond book of Moses we
ers on railroad tracks and they read that the Sabbath was insti-
are used chiefly where tbe ground | tutod in order to commemorate
is hard, but are not so good where *ke creation, because God rested
,, _____. • Ion the seventh day. In tbe fifth
the ground is soft. book of Moses ti»e Sabbath
Last year there were 1,176 min- simply mentioned as a memoria
ing accidents in Great Britain, of their coming out of Egyptt
loss of life of I ‘And that thy servant may rest as
1,447 persons. This is trifling in we^9 *^tic inUir,)retatl0n
comparison with losses in the “Adam” and "Eve” as meaning
United States. | "man" and "the living” was treat-
The city oi Philadelphia
week.
The new naval construction hill
includes a program up to 1919
and proposes the construction of
28 battleships, 10 scoot cruisers
and 52 ocean-going destroyers. It
is estimated that this will entail
during the period mentioned an
the above are i
Try a _
Cherry, Apricot or
“Wide Amice”
1033 W. Mala Street
Both
THE NATIONAL BANK OF DENISON
OtptUl *100,000.00
C. 8. OOBB, President
B. McDOUGALL. Vim Free.
11. 8. b«aic,
C. C. Jinks,
C. C. McCarthy,
n VI HUV* IIVV eu * J VUJ Uf
the rich fruits of the tree of life,
do they approach the divine, in
whose imao'e tbev were created.
State Writ.
promient citizen
recently
A
said:
If statewide prohibition was
adopted, and a day fixed for the
aggregate expenditure of 60 mu- emptying of every drop of intoxi-
‘ion sterling. catipg liquor in Texas into the
American capitalists have par- Mexico, tiiat thirty days
l . qc\ i i j - .. after it was emptied there would
chased 60,000 acres of land in the b^10t000 men in the state of Texas
’hilipinnes and will establish manufacturing different poisonous
sugar plantations, furnishing em- compounds to take the place of
ployment to the natives. Millions | the, more or less, pure liquors
acres are still available there *or **J®- 1 believe
, . , , ,. I this to be true, and the number of
and in other islands geograpbi-l per30ns who wi„ jn this
cally known as Oceania. nefarious practice, attracted by the
Northern Borneo wnich a few prices obtainable for this
„„„ „:i stuff, and fearless of the little risk
years ago was an unknown wil-1, deUH.tlon ^ey will run, will in-
derness, has in recent years de- crea9e jn number from day to day,
veloped an area as large as Ire- and from year to year, and so rap-
and and is open to cultivation. | idly, that in two years time, after
The Bermuda I.Und. have atrSSS^
been transformed into a semi-trop- ^11^ or a country dance, or a
ical garden for the production of [country gatliering in Texas which
vegetables which keep a fleet of] will not have .as its welcome
ships busy carrying them to the | though uninvited visitor, these
Jnited States [whiskey peddlers and bootleggers.
An electric power plant is to be I tefsna By
built in Chicago divided into sev- Through the election of a man
eral stations, the cost of which for mayor who had never won
will be $20,000,000. They will much prominence outside of his
be located upon 100 acres of business as auctioneer, Indianano-
ground .nd they «iB ^r.m pMA*’
160,000 horse power of electric I commission of thirty to regulate
currant. I vice. On the commission was a
The Carnegie Steel Company ^0'1.? Prie8t-a rabbb a
. , l I Methodist minister, Unitarian mtn-
las just booked an order for 12,- j8tefi a printer> a wholesale liquor
000 steel axles for steel cars. dealer, a former secretary of the
One of the original Confederate Anti-Saloon League and a miscel-
balf dollars coined in the United P***00* mfn.of *ood
~ character, who had not been in
States at New Orleans in 1861, politics. One division watched sa-
after it fell into tbe hands of the I loons, another moving pictures
Confederate government was re- shows and another the red-light
cently sold by a local coin dealer district.
f fp« 7«n I The men who form this commis-
“ '* 1 sion are among the best in the
It is proposed to increase the city. When they find an evil they
capital stock of the American Tel- report directly to the mayor, and it
ephone and Telegraph Company j» regulated at once. The mayor
from $300,000.0001o $600,000,000.
This company besides reaching all 0| citizens. The city is not torn
of the larger cities reaches 22,000 as under drastic reform mea-
of the smaller towns and villages, sures, but there has been such a
TO. fa.ro.t.p^ over ■»«.. by *£& £^ £
an automobile was made at Day- ing juat „ far aa practieable.-
tons, Florida, March 11. A mile|Free (Ills) Press,
was made in 28 seconds with a
ment is strictly non-polit
They toil us that Muskogee is
now a city of 21,000. We can
recollect a little over thirty years
ago when the population did not
exceed 1,600. We remember the
first (air held there, and the first
in tbe Indian Territory. It was
held east of the the railroad track
The wild tribes of tbe plains, Kio-
was, Comanches, and several oth-
er tribes were present in paint
and feathers. Carl Schultz. Sec-
retary of the Interior, was slso
present, and gave audience to tbe
Indian chiefs. The (air was crude
but it was a starter, for a year nr
so after a second fair was held at
Vinita and under better auspices.
At the Muskogee fair there was
splendid display of fruit and ce-
reals of the Territory- The first
day of the fair came near termina
Ling in bloodshed. Some bad
men of the Cherokee nation (the
Dick Vann clan) attempted to run
things. A huge Cherokee, armed
with a 45 Colt revolver, took
charge of the situation, but Uie
people fled the grounds and many
got behind cotton bales to escape
the bullets which were expecUx
to fly any moment. Oil was
poured upon the troubled waters
and peace reigned. There were
however, several "scenes” that
came near leading to bloodshed
Tlie turbulent sprits of the Five
Nations were tliere hunting trou-
ble. One of the best features o
the fair was the display of horse-
flesh and the graceful riding bv a
beautiful Cherokee girl. We can
hardly realize the change, tbe
wonderful change, ttiat has cotne
to the prairie citv.
Taking 13,000,000 bales as the
present average yearly yield
cotton. Dr. 8. A. Knapp, the gov-
ernment cotton expert, cites the
fact that the output lias doublet
every twenty-two years. Twenty
two years ago the crop was about
6,000,000 bales ; twenty-two years
before that abont 3,000,000 bales.
twenty-two years before that about
1,500,000 Ules. If the yield in-
creases in tbe same ratio tlie
South will be producing 28,000,-
000 bales in 1932.
K. 8. LEGATE, Cashier
P. J. BRENNAN. Aset Cashier
P.J. Breon
H. Regensl
J. bTMcDc
DoagolL
L. S. Parker, Jefferson City, Mo.
lntereM paid on depoeiU not exceeding three hundred ($300)
dollars in Savings Department.
Account* of corporations, merchants and individaals
and will be received upon the most favorable terms cooeieteat
with sale and conservative banking methods.
W. 8. Hibbard.
W. J. 1 neper
C. 8. Cobb.
THE
Denison Bank and Trust Co*
Pay* 4% Interest
Compounded twice a year, on tune defioaste.
Acts as agent for the sale or rent management of
every kind of real estate. Makes prompt collec-
tions and
comes.
remittances of rents «nd other in-
The State National Bank
Denlaon, Texas
L. Blackford,
President.
A. W. Acheron,
W. W. Elliott,
E. H. Lingo,
or r icc its:
A. F. Platter,
Vice-President.
DIRECTORS:
J. W. Madden,
J. B. McDoogall,
G. L. Blackford.
Courtenay Marshall.
(•LICIT Till IBSIBESS
W. G. Meginnis,
Cashier.
A. F. Platter,
P. H. Tobin,
D. N. Robb,
Light with Gas
and Cook with Gas
There is nothing like gas for cooking, for
I ness, for economy, or for saving labor. In hot
weather it is indispensable lor comport. Try cook-
ing with gas, if you have never hod the pleasure,
and you will never use any other hid lor kitchen or
house purposes.
Denison Light&PowerCo.
307 Wttdini Street
The following is the obligation
to secrecy which each successful
applicant for tlie position of census
enumerator will be required to
take:
“You are forbidden to com-
ma icate to any person any infor-
mation obtained by you in the dis-
charge of your official duties.
By so doing you will render your-
self liable upon conviction, to a
flue not exceeding $1,000 or to im-
prisonment not exceeding two
years, or to both fine and impris-
onment. (See section 22 of cen-
sus act.) You are not permitted
to show your schedules, when filed
or to retain copies of the same,
and it is your duty to destroy all
impel feet copies not returned to!
your supervisor. If, at tbe Hose
of tlie enumeration, jrou are asked
what is tlie population of your dis-
trict, or any part thereof, reply
that you are forbidden by the law
to answer. All such request,
whether from newspapers, focal
officials, or individuals, are to be]
referred to the director of tbe
census.”
The Biggest
•f the
BEST LYE
for the
Least Money
flying start.
On account of causing fires in
tbe Adriondack region the New
The portion of El Paso which it
[ has been decided belongs to the
| Mexican republic, of which so
York Central Railway Company mUf ha“ ***“ °J
such a momentous affair after all.
will be obliged to put on oil burn-
ing engines.
It is designated as the Chamizal
strip and is four blocks in width,
Inquiries for steel aggregating! parallels the Rio Grande river,
in cost about $12,000,000 reached apd j8 occupied mostly by adobe
Pittsburg in one day. Among the Mexican shacks. It was reported
inquiries 3,500 steel and steel un- the United States contemplated
derframe cars to be divided equal-1 trading 8an Elizario island, in the
ly between the Southern and Pa- j Rj0 Grande, tor this strip, but our
cific and the Union Pacific, 8,600 government has denied any such
all-steel gondola cars lor the intention. The claim may be sub-
Southern Railway and 1,000 all- nutted to some power friendly to
steel cars for the Burlington, both governments for arbitration.
There will be required for each oi
these cars about 12 tons of steel] The new depot as it looks at
and with tbe work to be done on' present is an imposing building,
them there will be a total tost per' but not until it is
cor of $1,200. I i
DENGRO BRAND
Stands for excellence. It is a brand under
which none but the best goods are sold. We
stand squarely behind it.
DENISON GROCER CO.
Grayson County, on last Satur-
day, voted to retain Prohibition,
despite the great towns of Denison
and Sherman returned heavy anti
majorities. The bucolic reform-
ers, however, had the call, and put
the lid on. Of course, there will
be the usual increase in the jug
trade, via wagon and slow freight
as well as by express.—Tbe Texas
Republic._
If you want to keep eggs laid
this summer fresh for winter use,
drop them as you bring them in
fresh each day into a glass of water
cootaining.lO per cent of common
liquid silicate oi soda. House-
hold Journal, Springfield, Ohio,
vouches for the efficacy of this
method. Its simplicity makes it
attractive.
Contain
^'•g “
A lull line oi
New Btt||les sal Harness,
Wagons and
Mowers, Hay Presses, etc.
Repairing and Buggy Painting.
MOSSE & CO.
PURE
ioe i
DENISON CRYSTAL ICE
1
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1910, newspaper, April 3, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth572233/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.